On The Road With John Tarleton

John Tarleton formerly wrote as a news and sports reporter at several daily newspapers. Hitchhiker, juggler, teacher, organizer, migrant farm worker and human right activist, he has traveled and written extensively as an independent web journalist. He is a graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism and currently works with the New York City Independent Media Center. Here are some of his
features and short stories. Suggestions and comments can be sent to
cybertraveler@cybertraveler.org

If you are interested in keeping up with John, his travels and writing, you may join the 'OnTheRoad' announcement list

Brooklyn Students Buck Military
The military currently enlists 350,000 people a year.
Its recruitment efforts have become increasingly
sophisticated, and relentless, since it switched from
the draft to an all-volunteer force in 1973 at the end
of the Vietnam War. It spends hundreds of millions of dollars to advertise...

Anti-War Movement Marches Uphill
With the economy tanking and the majority of Americans opposed to a unilateral attack against Iraq, a potentially broad-based peace movement has emerged a year into the “War on Terror”. Can it last?

Gulf War I: Memories of Death and Mayhem
Charles Sheehan-Miles finished basic training for the U.S. Army in August of 1991. Two weeks later he was deployed in Saudi Arabia with the 24th Infantry Division. He was 18. Raised in Atlanta, Sheehan-Miles comes from a long line of military men dating back to the Revolutionary War. He was eager to serve and protect his country, and spent eight months in the Persian Gulf theatre, history’s most toxic battlefield.

Pete Seeger Joins Fight for Harlem Garden
It’s a hot, sweltering day and the heat cooks you on the sidewalk as you stroll down a nearly treeless street in the middle of Harlem. It’s noisy as well as hot. Everywhere concrete and steel. Then, halfway down the block, you spot a canopy of trees that glisten like a green jewel. From the other side of the fence comes the sound of a guitar and people singing. You slip through a narrow gateway and find yourself walking on a soft dirt path in the shade of giant mulberry trees. This verdant garden seems to need no defense. Yet, it may be only a few weeks away from meeting the bulldozer. Supporters of the Joseph Daniel Wilson Memorial Garden on 219 W. 122nd St. are racing against time and an old friend of good causes is on hand to lift his voice.

Alternative Schools Give "F" to Regents Exams
Students at 28 alternative public schools may soon lose the chance to learn through inquiry instead of rote memorization as the State of New York pushes ahead with high-stakes standardized testing and a dumbed-down curriculum.

NYC Police Whack Weed March; 193 Arrested
Chanting "we smoke pot and we like it a lot!", a crowd of several thousand marchers poured into Battery Park at the southern tip of Manhattan. There were several stages and the crowd sat on the grass listening to music and speeches. The Statue of Liberty stood in the distance. And, dozens of undercover officers began moving through the crowd.

A Long Day in the Capitol of Punishment
Gary Graham was convicted and sentenced to die on the testimony of a single eyewitness. Was he a one man crime wave, or the scapegoat for a murder he didn't commit? Or both? The story of the most controversial capital murder case in recent Texas history.

Forest Defenders Halt Maxxam's Advance in the Mattole
Located at the juncture of three tectonic plates, the Mattole is a rugged, breathtaking mountain valley on Northern California's Lost Coast. Local residents are passionately defending it from planned clearcutting by Pacific Lumber, a wholly owned subsidiary of Houston based Maxxam Inc.

Seed Camp Journal: Notes from the 1999
Pennsylvania Rainbow
Gathering
SPECIAL FEATURE! The full anthology of dispatches that John Tarleton sent
off while living and
working inside the 1999 Rainbow Gathering. Fully engaged as both
participant and an observer,
he provides some of the most comprehensive and penetrating reportage to
ever come out of a
Gathering. Also includes 58 color photos.

1998 Arizona Rainbow Gathering: A Photo
Essay
SPECIAL FEATURE! The Rainbow Family is a tribe without any land; an
organization without
leaders. It is at once primitive and futuristic, zany and profound. In
July 1998 20,000 people
attended its annual Gathering in Sitgreaves National Forest in Northeast
Arizona. Color
photos included.

Professor Michael Niman: The Quest for
Utopia
Michael Niman is the author of People of the
Rainbow: A Nomadic Utopia, the first full length book on the Rainbow
Family. "Utopias are still important," he says, "because the world is still fucked up and people are still yearning for something better."

Public Interest Angels Descend on FCC
A spirited troupe of public interest angels recently descended on FCC headquarters in Washington calling for a reversal of government policies that have let the nation's media system to fall into the hands of a few global media conglomerates.

Navy Vet Begins One-Year Sentence for SOA Protest
A Navy vet-turned-peace activist begins a one-year prison sentence for entering a controversial military base in Fort Benning, Georgia to plant white crosses in memory of victims of U.S.-backed death squads.

Tammy Shea, Gateway Green Alliance
The Gateway Green Alliance is pushing a ballot initiative that would
make the St. Louis suburb of Webster Groves the first community in the
United States to go on the record as requesting that the state and/or
federal government require labeling of genetically-modified food
products.

David Stess: Documentary Photojournalist (In
a Hurry)
David Stess is a relentless photographer who is beginning to receive
acclaim for his work in rural Maine. Now, he stops for a few minutes to
talk about his love of black and white photography and the Maine wild
blueberry harvest. Story includes 13 of Stess's best photos from Maine.

Frank Andresen and the Strawbale
Revolution
Strawbale construction was first pioneered on the plains of western
Nebraska in the 1890s. And it has come into vogue again as more and more
Americans look for alternative methods of building houses that are both
affordable and long-lasting. For German clay-plastering expert Frank
Andresen this growing movement has offered a niche in which he can put his
skills to good use.

The Promise Keepers Rally: An American
Spectacle
Over 500,000 Christian evangelical men gathered on the Washington Mall on
October 4, 1997 in an unprecedented public display
of religious fervor. John Tarleton was there from start to finish and
brings back the rest of the story. Color photos
included.

Scott Dennis: Renegade Orchardist
Scott Dennis grows organic apples on his seven-acre orchard in Tonasket,
Washington where he lives with his wife and her two children. After
picking and pruning for 16 years on large, conventional orchards, he's
determined to do it his way. Color photos included.

WTO Photos: Faces of Resistance
Pictures from a week of protests that rocked the World Trade Organization. Includes photos from a 3-day vigil that was held in front of the King County Jail and the stories of some of the 500 plus WTO prisoners.

A16: Community Radio Advocates Air Their
Concerns
As Congress prepared to vote on the future of low-power
FM radio, a group of local radio enthusiasts marched in front of the
headquarters of the National Association of Broadcasters with duct tape
over their mouths.

A16 Activists Rally Against Military Aid
to Colombia
Colombian President Andres Pastrana came to Washington looking for $1.7
billion in military aid. His country has one of the worst human rights
records in the world. And, he was greeted at the Colombian ambassadors
residence by A16 activists chanting "No more arms! No more oil! No more
blood on Uwa soil!"

Protest Hits a High Note in Montgomery Co.
Schools
In the weeks leading up to the A16 Mobilization for Global Justice, school officials in the suburbs of Washington, D.C. began tearing down Mobilization posters at a furious rate. The students responded with a raucous and colorful demonstration in front of the school administration building.

Busted Puppets: Philly Police Arrest
Puppetistas, Toss Their Art Into
the Trash
75 puppetmakers were arrested on the second day of the
Republican National Convention for posssessing "instruments of crime" as thousands of other protesters took to the streets to protest against the criminal justice system. Later, the giant paper mache puppets were tossed into a trash compactor and uncermoniously hauled off to the town dump.

Protesters Endure Holmesburg Blues
Holmesburg Prison is a notorious century-old dungeon on the northeast side of Philadelphia. It has four-foot thick stone walls, bizarre acoustics, layers and layers of flaking lead paint and bitter-tasting faucet water that fizzles like hydrogen peroxide. It was the destination for some of the activists who were arrested outside the Republican Convention while protesting against the criminal justice system.

Government Crackdown on RNC Protesters Falters in Philadelphia Courts
The City of Philadelphia's legal battle against activists who were arrested during protests at the Republican National Convention continues to falter as wave after wave of charges are dropped due to dismissals, acquittals or lack of evidence. Midemeanor trials began November 8 and by mid-December courts had returned convictions in only 12 out of 147 cases.

Bicycle Fred: A Homeless Man Pedals Nader
Message
Bicycle Fred was struck down seven years ago by
a rare neurological disorder. He was paralyzed from
the waist down for two years before he learned to walk again. Now, he rides around the country promoting the longshot presidential campaign of
Ralph Nader. "I feel like our country is being looted without a shot being fired," he says.

Democratizing the Media: Voices from the
Indy Media Convergence
Close to 200 journalists from the creative fringe of the
media universe-community radio, public access cable TV, alternative
newspapers/magazines, activist web sites, etc.-gathered in
October 2000 in Burlington,
Vermont for the Independent Media Convergence to plot,
strategize and share experiences about how to create media democracy in
a society dominated by a handful of enormous media conglomerates. Includes
interviews with Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!, Danny Schechter of Globalvision and a
half-dozen other independent, grassroots journalists.

The IMC Fills A Niche: Protesters Develop Their Own
Global News Service
The IMC was an end run around the information gatekeepers.
With $30,000 in donations (including $20,000 grand from an ex-Microsoftie)
plus lots of borrowed equipment, the Seattle IMC was able to rent
high-tech equipment and occupy a small storefront office in downtown
Seattle. The revolution will not be televised. But now, it was ready to be downloaded.

2000 and Beyond: Texas Greens Look to the Future
In an era of billion dollar election cycles, six-second TV soundbites and a rapidly globalizing world economy, can a grassroots movement of modern-day populists break the US's two-party duopoly and gain a foothold in a system designed to discourage active citizen participation?

After Quebec, What Next?
The urge to get in the way of those who wield global power continues to be irresistible, and a diverse, teeming ecosystem of protest has emerged in the past year and a half as demonstrators around the world contest the values and the priorities of a corporate-driven globalization. Now what?

Pacifica Rebels Rebuild Battered Network
In a stunning victory, grassroots activists reclaimed the Pacifica radio network in January following years of dogged campaigning against a corporate clique that had seized control of the nation's only listener-sponsored radio network. Now comes the hard part: rebuilding a network that is millions of dollars in debt and exhausted by internicine battles.

The Media Goes to War
"Whenever you see this much coverage pointing in one direction, you should always feel for your wallet and head in the other direction," says one of the nation's leading media critics in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks.

Pacifica Rebels Turn Up Volume
Media activists from around the country descended on Houston for the spring board meeting of the troubled Pacifica Network. It was a tumultuous weekend of protests, rallies, teach-ins and walkouts as corporate liberals and grassroots radicals faced off in the basement of the upscale Doubletree Hotel.

WBAI Supporters Take to the Streets
On the last Saturday in April, a thousand New Yorkers marched across the Brooklyn Bridge demanding that the historically eclectic, leftwing station be returned to community control.

Interview with Stephen Dunifer, Microradio
Pioneer
Stephen Dunifer launched Free Radio Berkeley in the spring of 1993 with a
transmitter the size of a brick. He has since become the Johnny Appleseed
of microradio, building and distributing inexpensive broadcast equipment
throughout the United States and around the world while fighting a
historic legal battle with the Federal Communications Commission.

Community Radio Advocates Air Their
Concerns
As Congress prepared to vote on the future of low-power
FM radio, a group of local radio enthusiasts marched in front of the
headquarters of the National Association of Broadcasters with duct tape
over their mouths.

Professor George Kennedy, University of
Missouri School of Journalism
George Kennedy, co-author of News
Reporting and Writing, one of the most popular journalism textbooks
in history, talks about USA Today, the Internet, Monica, O.J.,
classism in higher education, concentration of corporate ownership in
the media and many other challenges facing journalism as it
enters the 21st Century.

The Spirit of Seattle Comes to Davos
Protesters, symbolized by a charismatic French sheepfarmer, took to the
streets of Davos, Switzerland while the planet's financial and political
elites
met behind police barricades for the annual World Economic Forum.

Jim, the Happy Wanderer
Jim is a happy wanderer who has been following his dreams for the past
five years. And now he is at it again: hiking the
1,781-mile Danube River from the southwestern tip of the Ukraine where it
empties into the Black Sea to its source in Germany's
Black Forest.

El Salvador Notes: Part 1 -
Part 2 -
Part 3It's the spring of 1994 and El Salvador is just beginning to recover
from a bloody,
12-year civil war. John Tarleton spent three months living, walking and
juggling among the everyday people of El Salvador.
In this 3-part series, he brings to life their stories as well as the
ambiguities of that nation's first-ever free and
non-violent elections. Also, he explores the possibilties for
reconciliation and just, peaceful social change in this tiny
Central American republic.

White Flags Over ChiapasSPECIAL FEATURE! For five weeks John Tarleton lived, worked,
laughed, played and went to school with the Zapatistas
while serving as a human rights observer in Chiapas's Lacandon Jungle.
This first-hand account will be of interest to anyone
who wishes to know more about the Zapatista Movement and its members.
Includes 14 color pictures.
Hear this article as read by the
author.

John Tarleton's Brief, Irreverent History of
Mexico
Follow the history of Mexico through the voices of the men and women who
have helped to shape, for better or worse, its
destiny. These biographical sketches are written in an easy Who Am
I format in order to allow the reader to test
his or her knowledge of Mexican history. Also includes color photos of
murals by Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, Juan O'Gorman,
José Angel Monje and Jorge Gonzales Camarena.

Gabino Silva: Hammock Maker
Once, Gabino Silva was a poor fisherman with a flair for mending broken
nets. Then, his brother-in-law showed him a basic one-color hammock made
in a nearby town. Gabino was certain he could do better. 14 years later,
he, his family and a half-dozen neighbors are busy producing some of the
most durable and comfortable, as well as artistic, hammocks in all of
Mexico.

A Mornings Work at Sea
Journey out to sea at sunrise with the fishermen of San Augustinillo as
they bring in the morning catch. Color photos
included.

A Wave of Change Inundates Zipolite
Zipolite means "Beach of the Dead" in Zapotec. And there is no other beach
quite like it in Mexico. The author looks back on
the gradual transformation of one of his favorite tropical beaches into a
booming tourist trap.

The American Dream Thrives in Puerto
Vallarta
Mexicos Pacific Coast is one of the worlds longest and most
beautiful coastlines. And, it has been an area of
intense economic development in the past 40 years. But what becomes of a
local community when it is swamped by Big Money
Tourism? John Tarleton takes a superficial first glance.

Sunset in San Blas
An ancient Mexican man contemplates a rich past and an uncertain future
while calmly watching a tropical sunset from amidst
the ruins of his rundown hotel.

Gregorio Lunas Conversion
The story of a Mexican mans search for spiritual meaning in a
traditionally Catholic culture that is rapidly changing.

An Exiles Final Home: Trotsky's Last Days
in Mexico
The true story of an aging revolutionary who was mercilessly hunted down
by former comrades while living in exile in Mexico
City, 8,000 miles from the revolution he did so much to help set
loose. Color photos included.

May Day in Mexico City
In the midst of Mexicos worst economic crisis in 65 years, Mexican
workers celebrate May Day with massive
demonstrations against their governments neoliberal economic
policies.
Hear this article as read by the
author.

The Misadventures of Argo Buckner
Welcome to the Republic of Gran Dolores where nothing is as it seems and a stranded traveler, Argo Buckner, finds himself selling stolen sewing machines from door-to-door while living on the streets amidst glue-sniffing orphans, corrupt police, spirited young missionaries and a cast of other unforgettable characters.

Heather Jenrettes Last Day at
Work
Ever since she put in her resignation, Heather had been counting down the days. And when Bernadette would drop by her office, she would look at the slashmarks on her friend's calender with wistful envy. "I wish I were going too, following blue sky wherever it leads," she would say. Her husky voice would be filled with longing. "I guess I'll have to continue looking at the Windows 95 logo on my computer screen."

The Letter Writer
The letter writer passed his days in a small second floor apartement in a provincial French city where he spent much of his
time writting letters to close friends whom he had not seen in years and who lived a half-mile away or more.

News of a Kidnapping by Gabriel
Garcia Marquez
It's Fear and Loathing in Colombia and the Nobel Prize winning novelist
returns to his roots as a newspaper reporter to tell the tale of his
tormented country through the harrowing stories of ten people who shared the common fate of being kidnap victims of Pablo Escobar and his Medellin Drug Cartel.